Duncan Coutts wrote:

Cabal can be upgraded using Cabal. This is important.

I think there are two things here.  First, its important that it can be 
upgraded.  Most distributions already have a package management system that can 
handle this.  I just got GHC, Haddock and a bunch of other stuff onto my new 
FC6 installation via Pirut, the FC6 graphical installer (which is coded in 
Python and would probably be much faster and better if it was in Haskell, but 
thats another story).  If Cabal and its supporting libraries are split out from 
the main distribution into separate packages then I can get an upgraded Cabal 
the same way without having to get those libraries as well.

Unlike well specified libraries like ByteString, Cabal tackles an
ill-specified problem and we're still learning how best to solve it, so
the api and features change much more frequently.

So if I become a Cabal developer rather than just a user, or I want the source 
for some other reason, then of course I can do a cabal-get cabal and all the 
relevant libraries get installed for me.

In short, I think that Cabal should work like any other application: you can 
just install the binary and go, or you can install the source (via Cabal) and 
hack it if you want to.  Binary installs should be handled by the distribution 
(Windows users can have a .msi, Mac users can have whatever the Mac equivalent 
is).  Compiler packages should generally include the Cabal binaries along with 
the compiler binary, Haddock binary and so on.

Paul.

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